Aunt Polly's Ordeal in Cordele
By Linda Lenzen Treiber
Aunt Polly can really
talk.
That's how she survived one single crystalline slice of
danger in Cordele, Georgia a few years
ago.
A family celebrity, she has been indulging the inborn urge
to wander her entire life. Her career:
Beloved kindergarten teacher known for creative and highly effective
teaching methods.
A lifelong single lady, she never settled down to the white
picket fence, 2.5 kids, suburban life that was so prized by women in her
generation.
If she got a hankering for kid interaction she simply went
to a brother or sister's house, announced her presence with her signature
greeting yodel "yoooo-hoooo!" and soaked up some niece and nephew
fun.
She would then blithely vamoose on the next leg of her
life's journey, her love tank all topped off.
Everyone knew Polly was addicted to adventure from the very
beginning. And no one dared bat an eyelash that she often traveled solo. There was none of that nelly-speak about the
perils of a single lady travelling alone in a world full of highwaymen and
thieves.
She just did. No
question.
To travel with Aunt Polly was to learn to be organized and
on schedule.
That's why her ordeal in Cordele, Georgia a few years back
is as vivid in the telling as the day it happened. Some guy messed up
her carefully planned routine in a big way.
Polly had driven her pre-set goal of eight hours on this leg
of her trip north going to see one or another of our kin in St. Louis.
The hotel in Cordele was probably a welcome sight for her,
since she knew it meant engaging in a comfortable linear set of activities -
check-in, unload, take a swim, a short nap, then, by 4:00 p.m. dinner and a
smoke at the restaurant fronting the hotel.
Nice and neat and predictable.
So with her signature short hair still wet but coaxed into a
salt and pepper pixie style hairdo, and wearing her uniform of cotton Capri
trousers and a light cotton button up sleeveless shirt with flats, Polly
strolled to the restaurant, sat down and rela
There was a older couple there, some men, waitresses and
other normal denizens of a restaurant catering to travelers using I-75.
Reading with her head down, probably puzzling over a crossword
as is her habit, Polly didn't notice the door open to reveal two men
struggling, one with his arm around the other's throat and a gun to his head.
It was the gunshot that captured her attention...
Reflexively, she put her pocketbook down between the wall
and the booth in which she was sitting and she tucked her cigarettes, for
whatever reason she cannot say now, in her belt.
The Man with the gun was wide-eyed and tall and wired.
Sweating and grunting with effort, he pushed his male hostage into the restaurant
and waved the gun around.
The older couple screamed as the bullet that had been shot
to get everyone's attention had grazed the
old man's ear rendering him bloody
and her hysterical.
"All the men get out!" growled the Man.
Polly remembers hearing the old lady pleading to go with her
injured husband and astonishingly she
was allowed to go.
Once the men and the old lady got out, leaving a slipstream
of sweat and noise behind them, the Man aimed the gun at Polly and told her to
get up.
And she did.
Why he picked her, Polly isn't sure. Could have been her
height which approximated his stature, the fact that she was looking at him in
her penetratingly curious way, that she
was closest to him, she doesn't know.
He wrapped his arm around her throat, lifted her to her tip-toes and barked orders to the four other women remaining with Polly in the
restaurant.
The strangest things went through Polly's mind, like that
her captor didn't smell like anything; there was no scent to the Man.
He pushed the women, stumbling and trembling, through the
kitchen area and into a back windowless pantry where they were forced to kneel
on the floor.
This was when Polly started talking
.
"You know what? I am a teacher. I taught for a long
time and you could've been one of my students, you know. I had lots of little
kids in kindergarten who grew up to look just like you. Do you remember any of
your teachers? I had pets like bunnies and guinea pigs right there in my
classroom. And I taught art too. My kids always enjoyed painting on big easels.
How about your Mom? Got any sisters? What are they going to feel when they hear
about this. What's your name?"
"SHUT UP!"
H pushed Polly's head down into a tray of yeast rolls where
amidst the heart wrenching scent of bread and escalating panic, Polly began
praying out loud. She intoned a fervent rendition of the rote Catholic prayers
that give so many of us comfort when things seem dangerous or hopeless, or
both.
"O my God, I am heartily sorry...Hail Mary Full of
Grace....our Father who art in heaven....I believe in one God, the Father
Almighty..."
"What is that you are saying there?" shouted the
Man.
"My prayers." answered Polly.
"Say them to yourself and close your eyes!
There was a pause.
A long pause during which Polly heard a hard to identify
jingling sound. It took a full minute to figure out that the Man was clumsily
reloading his small silver gun.
That jingling Polly heard was the loading of six bullets.
There were six of them in that pantry.
Then she blurted out with all the randomness of someone who
thought she was dead:
"I need a cigarette. Want one?"
"NO!" he thundered.
Then he paced, and paused, and paced and paused and then
said, "Yeah, I'll take one.''
A tiny "Me too!" squeaked from one of the other
captive women.
Polly was allowed to pick her head up from the bread tray,
open her eyes, reach into her pocket for a lighter and pull her cigarette pack
from her belt. She gave the Man a cigarette and lit it for him, shared another
with the pop-eyed panicked waitress who had requested it and finally treated
herself to one.
Always defiant about her smoking, and under the
circumstances, Polly probably enjoyed that first delicious drag on the
cigarette to the point of absolute rapture.
Then she began thinking of what to talk about next.
Although they couldn't directly see, they could all feel the
gathering of police cars and bystanders pressing in outside the restaurant to
witness the end game spectacle. The Man knew the storm was building to a
thundering crescendo outside and was plainly panicked to be so cornered.
Like public executions in the middle ages, people had
flocked to that parking lot with their children and neighbors in tow so see if
there would be blood.
The incident with this desperate man had begun miles down
I-75 where, running blindly from authorities, he ambushed a car of military men, killed one,
and took as hostage another. He sped
away in their car, and crashed it right in front of that restaurant where his
journey would also crash to a halt.
The radio was alive with blow by blow commentary about this
hostage situation in a truck stop restaurant in Cordele.
Put on your hat Mama, we're going to the hostage show!"
"It doesn't matter what you have done, you know, if you
just give up and walk out of here, it'll be better for you than any other idea
you might have.
"Why don't you give me the address of your mother then
so I can write her after all this is over and tell her what happened. So she
gets the real truth of it."
"NO! Just shut up."
"Look let us go, and I will walk out there and tell
them to just let you come peacefully. I will stand up for you. I will. They'll
listen to me."
"NO! No, they won't. Close your eyes!"
And five women breathing what they all thought were their
last breaths was the only sound heard in that pantry for a spell.
Tears pooled from beneath their closed eyelids and ran down
their cheeks.
Breathing gave way to hitching sobs.
They heard him walk up to and look at each of them,
muttering to himself under his breath.
They braced for that loud noise and flash of light that
would end their lives.
A moment, a teardrop, an ash fell to the floor.
And he said
"You, teacher, you get out of here. Tell them the
others will follow one by one."
Polly placed the cigarettes and the lighter on the counter
of the pantry, looked the black Man squarely in the eye, put her hands in the
air, and then turned around to walk to freedom.
With every step she took, she could've been shot either by
her captor or by the agitated gun-toting hair-trigger people outside.
It was a dangerous moment.
It was a long walk out the front door into the late
afternoon sunlight.
The police met her and, quick stepped her out of harm's way
and only half listening to her pleas to not shoot the man, placed her in a
trailer parked across the street where she could watch from a window what
happened next.
One by one, the other four women emerged from the
restaurant. Polly remembers one waitress running and screaming hysterically as
she swung open the door and sprinted to collapse dramatically in the arms of a
uniform. The others were like Polly, scared but reasonable.
No shots rang out in a barrage that day. The restaurant was spared the constellation of bullet holes it would've sustained had the black
Man come out blazing. The hungry crowd was disappointed.
No blood, no guts, no suicide by cop. What a gyp!
The small silver gun barely made a sound deep within the
restaurant pantry.
The black Man, who would get no justice in
Georgia, shot himself in the head amidst the echoes of a school teacher's
prayers and the lingering scent of fresh baked dinner rolls and cigarette smoke.
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